Oregon rolls over Liberty in Fiesta Bowl
GLENDALE, Ariz. — Oregon's expectations for a national championship in its final Pac-12 season fell six points short.
Behind a record-setting quarterback, the Ducks will head east to the Big Ten with a big trophy in tow.
Bo Nix threw for 363 yards and five touchdowns to cap a stellar career, and No. 8 Oregon closed out its Pac-12 era by rolling over No. 18 Liberty 45-6 in the Fiesta Bowl on Monday.
“Really, this game is about unfinished business and we said we’re wrapping up the last chapter of our book,” Oregon coach Dan Lanning said. “I thought our guys were a phenomenal chapter.”
Nix played like a Heisman Trophy finalist after opting to join his teammates on the field one last time, throwing for 257 yards and four touchdowns as the Ducks built a 31-6 halftime lead. Nix finished 28 of 35 in just over three quarters and completed 77.44% of his passes this season, breaking the NCAA record of 77.36%, set by Alabama's Mac Jones in 2020.
Tez Johnson had 11 catches for 172 yards and a touchdown, part of a 584-yard afternoon by the Ducks (12-2).
Considered a national title contender at the start of the season, Oregon missed the College Football Playoff with a pair of three-point losses to No. 2 Washington.
Winning the Fiesta Bowl won't erase the disappointment of coming so close to the CFP, but earning the massive Fiesta Bowl trophy is a nice way to close out Nix's career.
“I have played a lot of football, but every time I went out there it slowed down more and more,” said Nix, who started his career at Auburn. “And by the end of it, I just had a really comfortable feeling. I think this year with what we were doing offensively, schematically, we were very efficient.”
Liberty (13-1) overcame the death of freshman offensive lineman Tajh Boyd early in camp with the best season in the program's short FBS history.
Playing in their fallen teammate's honor, the Flames had the nation's best rushing attack and an opportunistic defense that led the nation in interceptions.
Liberty got off to a fast start in its first New Year's Six bowl, moving 75 yards in six plays in an opening drive capped by Keidon Salter's 17-yard touchdown pass to Bentley Hanshaw.
The Flames ran into waves of Ducks after that.
Liberty's offense had some small successes after the opening drive, but few big plays.
After limiting Oregon to a field goal on its opening drive, the Flames' defense got pushed around by the Ducks the rest of the afternoon to see their undefeated season come to a crashing end.
“They obviously laid it on us today,” Liberty coach Jamey Chadwell said. “We knew we’d have to play really well to compete and have a chance to win the game and they did a lot of things that made it challenging.”